1. Intro Bible 1 with Joel Kaminsky, hands down 2. Intro Soc with Kim Lyons - vies with Intro Bible for "most formative class" 3. my Lorca seminar, because it challenged me so much and made me feel like a real literature major for the first time in a while 4. Fairy Tales and Gender (Betsey Harries). i broke my post-IntroWomenStudies self-imposed rule of no classes with "gender" in the title for this course, and it was worth it. i learned so much and did some really great thinking, and it made me finally finish my Cinderella rewrite, and this course made me realize that i could do an academic future in what i love. 5. Telling and Retelling (Pat Skarda). a lot of great lit, and so much fun, and i contributed lots of intelligence and also snarked, and dude it was Skarda.
no subject
2. Intro Soc with Kim Lyons - vies with Intro Bible for "most formative class"
3. my Lorca seminar, because it challenged me so much and made me feel like a real literature major for the first time in a while
4. Fairy Tales and Gender (Betsey Harries). i broke my post-IntroWomenStudies self-imposed rule of no classes with "gender" in the title for this course, and it was worth it. i learned so much and did some really great thinking, and it made me finally finish my Cinderella rewrite, and this course made me realize that i could do an academic future in what i love.
5. Telling and Retelling (Pat Skarda). a lot of great lit, and so much fun, and i contributed lots of intelligence and also snarked, and dude it was Skarda.